Captain Seafort wrote:Then I suggest you see an optician, pronto.
Oh, stop, my sides can't take it.
Unfortunately, your attempt at deflective humor doesn't make your arbitrary divisions any less so.
Captain Seafort wrote:Once again, while there is a risk of damage to the body while participating in physical sports (which would include conditions that developed subsequently), damage to the body due to smoking or excessive drinking is not a risk, it is a certainty.
And,
once again, this fact is completely meaningless to the discussion at hand. If the footballer has either of the ailments I described, the ailment is a direct result of his career choice. I'm even giving you the benefit of the doubt in describing an ailment that results from the lifestyle choice, unlike the Swedish doctors. In any event, the degree of increase of risk is immaterial - we're hypothetically talking about an ailment that is directly resultant from said lifestyle choice. So, I'll ask again: the footballer's injury is a direct result of his choice to engage in a behavior that caused the injury whereas a different choice wouldn't have. So why should he be treated for it if a smoker shouldn't be treated for an ailment that
doesn't result from smoking or has recovery impaired by smoking?
Captain Seafort wrote:Utterly irrelevant to the point.
So, now anything which counters your point is "irrelevant?" You made the claim that my Tay-Sachs example was invalid due to the sufferer being incapable of choice in the matter. The fact of the sufferer being unable to make any decisions because of his state of infancy, and the decision to have a child while higher risk factors are present being the choice of the parents, counters that claim. What's being discussed here is a medical community's refusal to do their job because of people's decisions to engage in high-risk behavior. What I have described here is alternate situations in which the medical community could also apply that "logic," in the hopes of showing how ridiculous it sounds when applied to situations that don't offend a personal sensibility like smoking does. The fact that you are arguing to exclude my Tay-Sachs example only illustrates my point.
Captain Seafort wrote:Which is related to decisions made by the individual requiring treatment...how, exactly?
See above. Your continued attempts to show lack of decision by an individual incapable of making a decision are both laughable, and getting annoying.
Captain Seafort wrote:Baby step. Right. Just like the minute baby step in warfare from throwing a rock to throwing a thermonuclear-tipped ICBM.
No, not like that. Like a baby step. If you want to attribute implications which aren't present in order to try and discredit my point, I suggest you try to do it less obviously. However, as I mentioned above, we are discussing what would follow in the minds of a medical community which would refuse to do its job because of an offended sensibility or - worse - because their job might be more difficult than in another case. In this paradigm of discussion, it's exceedingly easy to envision someone making the "baby step" I described. Your hyperbole without point doesn't change that.